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Erich Armand Arthur Joseph Hückel

German chemist (1896–1980)

Born the son of a physician in Berlin, Hückel was educated at the University of Göttingen, gaining his PhD in 1921. He worked at a number of institutions, including the Zurich Technische Hochschule and in Copenhagen, Leipzig, and Stuttgart, before taking the chair of theoretical physics at Marburg in 1937.

Initially Hückel worked with Debye on electrolyte solutions. From 1930, however, he turned his attention to organic compounds. Since Friedrich Kekulé had discovered the structure of benzene (C6H6) in 1865, it had continued to puzzle chemists. Kekulé had shown that the six carbon atoms of benzene were formed into a ring joined by alternating single and double bonds. Organic chemists call such molecules as benzene ‘aromatic’ thereby indicating, among other things, the molecule's great stability. Yet, double bonds normally make a molecule reactive. How, then, it was asked, can certain molecules like benzene with double bonds be so stable?

In the 1930s Hückel developed an answer to this problem based upon molecular orbital theory. Molecular orbitals are formed from overlapping atomic orbitals. Hückel proposed that the electrons of the pi-orbitals were delocalized and spread diffusely above and below the plane of the carbon ring. As this configuration was energetically more stable than placing electrons in isolated double bonds, benzene's stability followed directly from the model.

Hückel went on to generalize his model to cover other cyclic molecules containing alternating double and single bonds. Aromatic molecules were planar compounds which had precisely 4n + 2 pi-electrons, where n = 0, 1, 2, 3…. This is known as the Hückel rule. Benzene represents the case where n = 1; and n = 2 and n = 3 represent the 10 and 14 member aromatic rings of naphthalene and anthracene. For n = 0, the predicted aromaticity of a 3 member ring was confirmed in 1962 with the discovery of the cyclopropenyl cation.

 
 
Wikipedia: Erich Hückel

Erich Armand Arthur Joseph Hückel (August 9, 1896 - February 16, 1980) was a German physicist and physical chemist. He is known for two major contributions:

Hückel was born in the Charlottenburg suburb of Berlin. He studied physics and mathematics from 1914 to 1921 at the University of Göttingen.

On receiving his doctorate, he became an assistant at Göttingen, but soon became an assistant to Peter Debye at Zürich. It was there that he and Debye developed their theory (the Debye-Hückel theory, in 1923) of electrolytic solutions, elucidating the behavior of strong electrolytes to account for their conductivity by considering interionic forces.

After spending 1928 and 1929 in England and Denmark, working briefly with Niels Bohr, Hückel joined the faculty of the Technische Hochschule in Stuttgart. In 1935, he moved to Phillips University in Marburg, where he finally was named Full Professor a year before his retirement 1961. he was a member of the International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science.

Hückel is most famous for developing simplified quantum mechanics methods to deal with planar unsaturated organic molecules. In 1930 he proposed a σ/π separation theory to explain the restricted rotation of alkenes (compounds containing a C=C double bond). This model extended a 1929 interpretation of the bonding in triplet oxygen by Lennard-Jones [1]. According to Hückel, only the ethene σ bond is axially symmetric about the C-C axis, but the π bond is not; this restricts rotation. In 1931 he generalized his analysis by formulating both valence bond (VB) and molecular orbital (MO) descriptions of benzene and other cycloconjugated hydrocarbons. Although undeniably a cornerstone of organic chemistry, Hückel's concepts were undeservedly unrecognized for two decades. His lack of communication skills contributed. The famous Hückel 4n+2 rule for determining whether ring molecules comprised of C=C bonds would show aromatic properties was first stated clearly by Doering in a 1951 article on tropolone [2] Tropolone had been recognised as an aromatic molecule by Dewar's brilliant insight in 1945.

In 1936, Hückel developed the theory of π-conjugated biradicals (non-Kekulé molecules). The first example, known as the Schlenk-Brauns hydrocarbon, had been discovered in the same year. The credit for explaining such biradicals is usually given to Christopher Longuet-Higgins in 1950 [3]

In 1937 Hückel refined his MO theory for unsaturated organic molecules. This is still used occasionally as an approximation, though the more precise PPP Pariser–Parr–Pople method succeeded it in 1953. "Extended Hückel MO theory" (EHT) has its origins in work by William Lipscomb and Roald Hoffmann for nonplanar molecules in 1962.

References

Further reading

  1. E. Hückel, 'Quantum theory of double linkings.' Z. Physik, 1930, 60, 423.
  2. E. Hückel, 'Quantum-theoretical contributions to the benzene problem. I. The electron configuration of benzene and related compounds' Z. Physik, 1931, 71, 204-86 and 'Quantum theoretical contributions to the problem of aromatic and non-saturated compounds' 1932, 76, 628
  3. E. Hückel, The theory of unsaturated and aromatic compounds, Z. Elektrochem.Angew. Physik. Chem., 1937, 42, 752 and 827.
  4. E. Hückel, 'Theory of the magnetism of so-called biradicals', Z. Physik. Chem., 1936, B34, 339.
  5. R. Pariser, R. G. Parr, 'A semi-empirical theory of the electronic spectra and electronic structure of complex unsaturated molecules.', J. Chem. Phys., 1953, 21, 466-71; J. A. Pople, 'Electron interaction in unsaturated hydrocarbons.' Trans. Faraday Soc., 1953, 49, 1375-85.
  6. R. Hoffmann, W. N. Lipscomb, 'Theory of polyhedral molecules. I. Physical factorizations of the secular equation.', J. Chem. Phys. 1962, 36 2179-89.


Persondata
NAME Hückel, Erich Armand Arthur Joseph
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION German physical chemist known for the Debye-Hückel Theory and the Hückel method
DATE OF BIRTH August 9, 1896
PLACE OF BIRTH Berlin, Germany
DATE OF DEATH February 16, 1980
PLACE OF DEATH

 
 

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